We'd love to know what you are finding useful out there to manage your GTD lists on your mobile device. Please take the poll!

Working at Doit and Nirvana, both of which are specific to GTD as opposed to just general task/list apps. I only need Android and PC capability, no need for mac products or a tablet, so my requirements are not as extensive as a lot of people on this forum.
I wish David Allen Co would take the plunge and develop its own app / software, though I know that's a very different business from your primary focus.

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Keep many of my day-to-day lists in Google Tasks since I use google mail as my primary email and its the easiest way to track and links with Google calendar. I use a google doc spreadsheet for projects and other higher levels lists as well as my lists for individual people.

For me it works great for work and a bit less well for home but am working on that.

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it seems to work well enough. It's a great place to keep reference material... but a little cumbersome to compose a list on my phone. much easy on the desktop. Its web based and one time their server went "tits up" for two days... and i was unable to access it for the entire time it was out. Definitely a downside. It's free and now that they fixed the "online only" part it's my go to application.

I also use Colornote (for android) as a quick way to jot down a few things. Its only a phone app.

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I am a big fan of The Hit List, both on the Mac side and very soon, on the iPhone side, as I attempt to migrate from BlackBerry to iPhone 5, when my device arrives.

THL is really slick, does everything I need, has a very intuitive dashboard and entry system, and IMHO, runs circles around the other confusing interfaces of tools like DevonThink, Things and similar apps.

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I am a big fan of The Hit List, both on the Mac side and very soon, on the iPhone side, as I attempt to migrate from BlackBerry to iPhone 5, when my device arrives.

THL is really slick, does everything I need, has a very intuitive dashboard and entry system, and IMHO, runs circles around the other confusing interfaces of tools like DevonThink, Things and similar apps.

I actually found The Hit List to be non-intuitive, and prefer both Things and OmniFocus to it. It's one of the programs I stopped testing after entering only a few test items. Different strokes for different folks, I guess.

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It is not available as a native app on any platform, but their mobile site works very well from my Android phone. I like to use my PC to add and organize tasks, because of the larger screen and actual keyboard. If perchance I am totally offline, the mobile version will still allow me to see my tasks, and if I make any changes, they will sync up when I am next online.

GQueues can integrate with Google Calendar, but I choose not to do that.

Why I like most about it is that it has a very clean look, so I can focus on my information instead of the pretty screen.